Key takeaways
- ACE.MD is a paid USCE agency with visible rotation pricing and letterhead-related claims.
- Verify the exact site, scope, preceptor, and letter policy before paying.
- Compare it with similar paid agencies instead of choosing by marketing language.
Where ACE.MD fits
ACE.MD markets U.S. rotations, clerkships, externships, electives, research, hands-on opportunities, telemedicine rotations, and letterhead-related options. It is direct about pricing tiers and housing estimates on its public site, which makes it easier to compare against other paid agencies.
The key is to separate transparent pricing from educational quality. A listed price tells you cost; it does not tell you whether the exact preceptor will observe your performance closely enough to write a meaningful letter.
Best for
- Applicants comparing paid externship-style rotations with visible pricing.
- IMGs who want to ask about hands-on outpatient or inpatient exposure.
- Applicants comparing letterhead-related options while still understanding letters should be performance-based.
- Learners who need housing and city logistics discussed up front.
Verify first
Ask whether your exact placement is outpatient, inpatient, both, research, or telemedicine. Ask who supervises you, what you are allowed to do, and what makes a letter possible. If a provider advertises hospital letterhead, ask what the letter can truthfully say about your observed clinical performance.
Compare ACE.MD against FMG Portal and MedClerkships if you are deciding among paid agencies with externship, elective, consultation, or research add-ons.
Bottom line
ACE.MD is worth considering when you want explicit paid-rotation options and pricing. The decision should still come down to site quality, supervision, legal scope, feedback, and whether the letter would be specific and honest.
Official resources
Common questions
What is the main thing to verify with ACE.MD?
Verify the exact placement: outpatient or inpatient setting, hands-on versus observation, preceptor role, permitted duties, letter policy, housing, and total cost.
Should I choose ACE.MD because of letterhead claims?
No. Letterhead is less important than whether a supervisor can truthfully write a specific letter based on observed performance.
Train the habit